|
Comments
Did you read today's front page stories & breaking news?
SYS-CON.TV
|
Industry Buzz via Twitter Microsoft-Yahoo! - Around the Bid in Eighty Blogs
Live by the Web, die by the Web - we look at what the blogosphere is saying about Microsoft's $44.6BN offer
By: Jeremy Geelan
Feb. 9, 2008 05:00 AM
Jay Greene (BusinessWeek): "Microsoft expects to reap $1 billion in operating efficiencies by combining the 14,000-person Yahoo with the 80,000-employee Microsoft. Looks great on paper. The reality, though, may be something else entirely. Start with efforts to meld or eliminate overlapping businesses. There are dozens of them, everything from news Web sites and Net portals to e-mail, instant messaging services, and online advertising technology. To achieve the projected cost savings, Microsoft will have to choose which businesses survive and which ones don't. Mark Cuban ("Blog Maverick"): "The question isn't whether Yahoo should sell. It should. The only question is what the structure of the deal should look like so that Jerry and David can achieve many of the goals they set out to accomplish on the net under the MSFT umbrella. Mark Anderson (SNS Blog):
"If Microsoft and Yahoo DO merge, they’ll need a new brand. They need a trusted brand identity. This need to re-brand for the mass market could precipitate the splitting up of Microsoft into two separate businesses: Microsoft, the consumer business (Yahoo/MSN and Xbox and Microsoft Live consumer software as a service), and Microsoft, the enterprise business (office applications, server software, and distributed systems)." Jon Fortt (Fortune): "In the end, Yahoo’s most effective evasive maneuver might be to drag the process out as long as possible. Why? Microsoft’s stock has dropped more than 10 percent since it announced its hostile bid — a development that both decreases the value of its offer and irks any Microsoft shareholders who are skeptical of the deal. That’s why you can be sure that Microsoft won’t give Yahoo board members long to ponder their escape options before the software giant moves to take the deal directly to Yahoo shareholders." MG Siegler ("ParisLemon" Blog): "Speaking of Ballmer, if Microsoft fails in this attempt to buy Yahoo somehow, it may be time for him to go. From an outsider's glance it might make sense for Microsoft and Yahoo to become one - for both sides. Steve M. Davidoff (The New York Times "Dealbook" Blog) "Microsoft states in its letter that:
"The Microsoft/Yahoo deal, if it happens, means very little for the entrepreneurial climate in Silicon Valley, or the opportunities available to you and your startup. Your job is exactly the same as before: build something people want, scale it up, make sure it's defensible, and make sure you can make money with it. Build a company you are proud of." Reader Feedback: Page 1 of 1
Your Feedback
SOA World Latest Stories
Subscribe to the World's Most Powerful Newsletters
Subscribe to Our Rss Feeds & Get Your SYS-CON News Live!
|
SYS-CON Featured Whitepapers
Most Read This Week |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||